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Google Chrome - first impressions

by Chris Smith
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I thought I'd just give my tuppence worth on Google's new BETA browser, Chrome.

When I first heard about Google's new browser it was with dread. As a web developer an important part of developing any web page or application is testing that it works in the major browsers. Having another browser on the scene, and with a big name like Google behind it you know it's going to have a lot of users, means more testing and increases my chances of having to recode.

Before downloading it I read Google's page on Why We Built A Browser. The page itself is titled "A fresh take on the browser". On it Google openly admits "We've used components from Apple's WebKit and Mozilla's Firefox". So, maybe not an entirely fresh take then?

So, on going in, what are my first impressions? Well, first thought, it looks pretty much the same as IE and Firefox. The browsing tabs have been shifted above the address bar, which, as far as I can see, is just a change for change's sake rather than serving any useful purpose - why make people have to get used to something new when the browers they are used to work just fine? Other than that, without delving too deep, I'm struggling to find anything radically different.

On the plus side, it doesn't have loads of toolbars, keeping a nice clean, simple appearance - one of the great strengths of Google's search engine. After using it for a while, I noticed that it remembers the sites you visit and uses this data intelligently to make it quicker to revisit them. It's fast too, noticeably quicker than IE.

On the negative side, it doesn't seem to handle RSS feeds and feed reading as well as IE or Firefox (with RSS add-ons) but I'm sure this will come.

Firefox has been the web professional's choice for years now and with good reason. So, will Chrome offer us anything new that Firefox can't? As I see it, the reason for Firefox's success hasn't been about speed or security but freedom. It's great strength is that it's so easy to customise and ease of using add-ons make it much more than a tool for reading web content. I'm assuming that, being an open source project, Chrome will follow suit.

It seems a shame to me that all of the excellent developers out there who have been building add-ons for Firefox will now be split between Firefox and Chrome.

I don't think that Google will better Firefox but they will be able to match it and with their finances and history of buying up big web companies (YouTube, FeedBurner) I wouldn't be a bit surprised if we saw Google Firefox before too long.

See what you think - Google Chrome